Photobooth Self-Portrait

Andy Warhol  (American, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1928–1987 New York City)

Date:
ca. 1963
Medium:
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions:
19.6 x 3.6 cm (7 3/4 x 1 7/16 in.) each
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
Purchase, Rogers Fund, Joyce and Robert Menschel, Adriana and Robert Mnuchin, Harry Kahn, and Anonymous Gifts, in memory of Eugene Schwartz, 1996
Accession Number:
1996.63a,b
Rights and Reproduction:
© 2011 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
  • Description

    This pair of photo-booth strips is one of Warhol's earliest experiments with photography, a medium that increasingly dominated his art during his peak years of innovation from 1962 to 1968. For Warhol, the photo booth represented a quintessentially modern intersection of mass entertainment and private self-contemplation. In these little curtained theaters, the sitter could adopt a succession of different roles, each captured in a single frame; the resulting strip of four poses resembled a snippet of film footage. The serial, mechanical nature of the strips provided Warhol with an ideal model for his aesthetic of passivity, detachment, and instant celebrity. Here, Warhol has adopted the surly, ultracool persona of movie stars such as Marlon Brando and James Dean, icons of the youth culture that he idolized.

    These strips were owned by the collector Sam Wagstaff and, after his death, by his friend the artist Robert Mapplethorpe.

  • Provenance

    April Axton; Samuel J. Wagstaff, Jr.; Robert Mapplethorpe; Christie's (11/8/89 sale); Robert Miller Gallery

  • See also
    Who
    What
    Where
    When
    In the Museum
    Timelines from the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
    Essays from the Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
190019240

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